Dear SaaStr: How Do The Best Sales Leaders Retain Their High Performers?
A few ways I’ve observed that the best sales leaders retain the best:
- They promote the best. You can’t promote everyone, but you can almost always promote your best.
- They make them better. They help make sure their biggest deals close. Even more than usual. They get FDE-style help, engineering attention on hard deals, and the founder showing up when the customer needs to feel the air change.
- They have fun together. Movies, golf, lunch, whatever.
- They pay them well — and as well as they can. They push to make sure their top performers are paid high market at least. In 2026, that bar has moved. The hottest AI companies are setting quotas at 20x base salary, with 80%+ of reps hitting them. Your top performer knows what’s out there. Pay them like it.
- They make them feel secure. That they have a real role and stake, and are important. They make sure they know there is no chance they will get fired or treated unfairly. Especially as AI agents pick up more of the GTM motion, top reps need to hear directly that their job is secure and that they’re a critical part of where the company is going. Don’t let them guess.
- They restructure around their top performers, not on top of them. The #1 thing high performing reps hate is change. They can react very strongly when their job gets even just 15-20% harder, because they have it dialed in. You can’t stop change. But you can engage them as part of it, rather than have them learn about it in an email. Even better: when the product or market shifts, the best leaders build new structure around the top reps so they can keep winning. Matt Plank’s story at Rippling below is a great example. When they went from 4 products to 30, they didn’t just retrain the existing reps and hope. They built a whole new “product AE” role — specialists who tag in to help close deals on newer products — so the core reps could keep doing what they were great at. Top reps don’t quit because the company evolves. They quit because the company evolves and leaves them behind. This applies double to AI tooling rollouts and pipeline redistribution to AI motions. Bring them in early. Get their input. Make them part of designing it.
- They give them the AI tools to be 2x more effective. This is new for 2026. The best sales leaders aren’t just paying their top reps well. They’re buying them custom GPTs, AI research agents, AI co-pilots on calls, AI-drafted follow-ups. Top reps in 2026 want leverage, not just leads. Give it to them.
- They give them real product input. Great sales leaders ask their top performers what they want to achieve this year, and they help them achieve it. But the best go further: they give their top reps a real seat at the product table. Not just “feedback we’ll consider.” Actual influence that shows up in the roadmap. The best B2B companies treat their top performer’s pattern recognition as core product input — what objections keep coming up, which features prospects actually ask for, which competitor claims are starting to land. Top reps stay when they feel like they’re helping build the product, not just selling it. Michelle Benfer, ex-SVP of Sales at HubSpot and Bill, does a great deep dive on how to do this well here.
All of this works, but not 100% of the time. Some of your best will leave, looking for greener grass. Even when it’s not greener. But you can decrease the odds.
